Count me among the working stiffs underwhelmed by the restraint America's financial kings have shown only a few months after the federal government had to step in with capital and blanket guarantees to save the system from collapse.
In recent weeks, we've been treated to stories about seven-figure bonuses at Merrill Lynch, AIG, Goldman Sachs, Citigroup and other firms where the executive classes made out as their firms collapsed or were saved thanks to taxpayer largesse.
Meanwhile, the productivity of U.S. workers grew in the second quarter at the fastest pace in almost six years as employers slashed payrolls to bolster profits, according to government statistics. Productivity, a measure of how much an employee produces for each hour worked, rose at an annual 6.4 percent pace.
Labor costs fell by the most in eight years.
Great. There are fewer bank tellers, assembly line workers and carpenters, and the survivors are working longer hours for less.
Meanwhile, some of the captains of the financial world and their boards of directors have figured out ways to get around the government's loophole-riddled rules for companies that got government capital last fall.
And it's not just grumpy neighbors or $40,000-a-year customer-service agents or laid-off workers calling in to complain.
"Workers are angry because they see executives walking off with millions and destroying the workers' financial security," said Jim Mitchell, the retired CEO who for 15 years ran IDS Life, now part of Ameriprise Financial Inc. "They screwed up the system. The public has lost trust in business. That's not good."